ENGLAND
3 (1) v INDIA 2 (2)
University
of Birmingham, England, Sunday, 2 August 2009
Another
Ashley Jackson double and one from Reading’s Iain Mackay
gave England victory over India in the final test at the University
of Birmingham on Sunday.
England
were forced to fight their way back into the game after falling
two goals behind inside 18 minutes.
England
began the match poorly and a cagey start saw defenders Richard
Mantell and Ali Wilson both gift India possession inside the
opening two minutes. India took heart from their best opening
to a match this week and were ahead just a minute later when
a foul inside the circle after goalkeeper Nick Brothers’
penalty corner save resulted in a penalty stroke being awarded.
From
the spot, Vikram Pillay slotted home low to Brothers’
left, although the goalkeeper almost kept it out, diving low.
England
countered from the restart and Iain Mackay narrowly missed
connecting with Matt Daly’s cross before Brothers was
again called into action, smothering well Dhananjay Mahadik’s
shot from the top of the circle.
The
home team won their first penalty corner after 14 minutes
but Matt Daly’s tame effort was comfortably saved by
Adrian D’Souza.
Leading,
India were playing with confidence and went two up after good
interplay in the final quarter of the pitch released Rajpal
Singh along the baseline and his cross to Sunil was smashed
home from five metres.
Thereafter,
England enjoyed a spell of prolonged possession but their
probing was only rewarded with a number of long corners as
India defended well in numbers. In the 24th minute Ashley
Jackson’s penalty corner effort was touched over the
bar by Adrian D’Souza but he found his spot just six
minutes later when he unleashed a powerful drag flick high
into the left corner to pull England to within a goal of the
visitors.
England
had another opportunity from the set piece shortly before
the break but Matt Daly’s effort was charged down and
deflected wide by the stick of the onrushing defender.
Into
the second half and England emerged stronger and hungrier
than at any time in the first period. Disappointingly however,
several good chances went begging as first Surbiton’s
James Tindall blazed high and wide from the top of the circle
and then Harry Jawanda, playing in only his second senior
international, failed to connect with Ashley Jackson’s
early cross to the penalty spot.
India
were awarded a penalty corner in the 42nd minute but Dhananjay
Mahadik’s effort was ruled out by the umpire.
Midway
through the second half and England were beginning to exert
some authority on the match. Ashley Jackson and Martin Jones
combined well down the left but Jackson’s reverse stick
effort was deflected over the bar but with 20 minutes remaining,
Jackson got his second of the game and his fourth of the series
when he beat D’Souza powerfully to his right at a penalty
corner to make it 2-2.
With
the Indian fans drumming in the stand and looking to inspire
their players, the men in blue went back on the attack through
Prabodh Tirkey, who drove at the heart of the English defence
only to find Richard Mantell and Richard Smith standing firm.
England
passed up further opportunities to take the lead as Tindall
found himself crowded out inside the circle and Jawanda dallied
on the ball around the penalty spot, allowing the Indian defenders
to recover.
The
hosts did get their winner though with seven minutes remaining
when one of the best flowing moves of the match was finished
off by Iain Mackay who deflected home from close range. Starting
the move, Rob Moore drove hard down the left of midfield before
switching play quickly to the right where the onrushing Richard
Alexander was on hand to fire the ball into the circle on
the angle where Mackay deflected the ball with pace high into
the net.
There
was still time for a tense finale as India were awarded a
penalty corner with just 14 seconds left on the clock but
England were wise to the move that had brought a goal on Wednesday
and the defence stood firm, blocking Arjun Halappa’s
effort to a ecstatic roar from the England bench. 3-2 the
final score.
Goal
scorer Iain Mackay was pleased with his contribution at the
end. “I scored in the 1-1 draw against Pakistan
but it is good to get the winner today. India have definitely
improved during the week so it was nice to come out on top
in this third game and although it was a bit shaky at the
end the penalty corner defence stood firm.”
Speaking
afterwards, coach Jason Lee expressed his disappointment with
how the team had begun the game but was upbeat ahead of the
EuroHockey Nations Championships in three weeks and looking
ahead to London 2012. “We have seen over the week
here that the pitch is slippy and in the first 20 minutes
we struggled, we didn’t play properly. You saw the difference
later on when we began playing properly – players stayed
on their feet much more."
“The
summer series’ that we’ve played against the likes
of Australia, Netherlands, Pakistan and India have been great
for us ahead of London 2012. We’re further ahead in
our preparation than normal and with a squad of 30 or so players,
which is ten more than we would normally work with, we are
in good shape for the next three years.”
Teams:
ENGLAND:
Nick Brothers (G/K); Jonty Clarke; Matt Daly; Adam Dixon;
Ashley Jackson; Glenn Kirkham; Iain Mackay; Richard Mantell;
Rob Moore; Richard Smith; Ali Wilson. Substitutes: Richard
Alexander; Dan Fox; Harry Jawanda; Martin Jones; James Tindall.
Goal
Scorers:
ENGLAND: Ashley Jackson 30, 50 (PC, PC); Iain Mackay
64 (F)
INDIA:
Vikram Pillay 3 (PS); Sunil S.V. 18 (F)
For
Official Result Sheets for the 3 England v India Matches click
here
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